Guest Post: Do We Even Need a Banking Sector? Not Any More

Submitted by Charles Hugh Smith from Of Two Minds

Do We Even Need a Banking Sector? Not Any More
 

An automated banking utility has no need for parasitic bankers or politicos or indeed, a central bank.

Do we need a banking sector dominated by politically untouchable “Too Big to Fail” (TBTF) banks? Thanks to fast-advancing technology, the answer is a resounding no. Not only do we not need a banking sector, we would be immensely better off were the banking sector to wither and vanish from the face of the Earth, along with its parasitic class of political enablers, toadies and Federal Reserve apparatchiks.

The key to understanding why big banks have outlived their purpose is to grasp the implications of computing power, self-organizing networks and crowdsourcing. Banks came into existence to manage the accumulation of capital (savings) and distribute the capital to borrowers in a prudent manner that minimized risk and still yielded a return for savers and the bank’s investors/owners.

Back in the pre-computer era, the record-keeping and risk management processes of these two core functions required a complex bureaucracy and a concentration of accounting skills and lending experience. The costs of operating this record-keeping and risk management bureaucracy was high, and these costs justified the bank’s fees and interest rate spread. In an idealized scenario, a bank might pay depositors 3% annual yield on their savings and charge borrowers 5%. The 2% spread was the bank’s to keep for performing the accounting, collection and risk management functions.

Today, computers running scripts/programs can perform these functions with minimal human oversight and at very low cost. The tracking and recording of millions of transactions and accounts no longer requires thousands of clerks and a large institutional bureaucracy; a relative handful of software engineers are all that’s needed to maintain these services, which are in effect a low-cost utility.

Risk management and lending are also computerized; the human interface of a banker is a bow to tradition, not necessity. Crowdsourced funding is entirely computerized: those with money/capital choose to join a pool of lenders who accept the risk of lending to an individual, household, project or enterprise for a specified return.

This process of aligning excess capital (savings) with borrowers is already automated. Is there a role for regulation? Absolutely: such a system requires transparency that can be trusted. Those who violate this trust with cooked-books, lies, misinformation, etc. must suffer negative, long-lasting consequences, starting with being banned from the system.

It is an abiding irony that the present banking system’s secret portfolios and processes (shadow banking, derivatives designed to fail and trigger profitable defaults, etc.) are considered core competitive advantages: in other words, eliminating transparency generates the highest-return bank profits.

And let’s not overlook the political consequences of these immense profits: a political and regulatory order that is easily captured to serve the interests of big banks. The number one agenda item is of course to arrange Central State protection of the most profitable (i.e. the least transparent) parts of the banking sector’s operations.

This lack of transparency distorts the financial market, rendering it systemically vulnerable to malinvestments and risky speculations and the financial crashes that result from these systemic distortions.

The other top agenda item for bank lobbyists is to arrange Central State/Federal Reserve subsidies of bank profits. These subsidies are also known as financial repression, as the Central State/Bank rigs interest rates and regulations to favor bank profits at the expense of both savers and borrowers.

Thanks to the Federal Reserve’s Zero Interest Rate Policy (ZIRP), savers have been robbed of hundreds of billions of dollars in income–money that has been effectively transferred to the banks by the State. This is why I call our system State-Cartel capitalism, as the State and cartels rule in a mutually beneficial marriage at the expense of the real economy, the citizenry and especially what’s left of the dwindling middle class.

Since the core functions of banks can now be performed by cheap processors and software, we can get rid of the entire parasitic banking sector, once and for all. But what about investment banking? That too can be automated. What about wealth management? In a world where index funds beat 96% of money managers over a long time-frame, that too can be automated.

But what about the tens of millions of dollars in campaign contributions politicos skim from the bankers? Now we finally reach the real reason why the parasitic banking sector is allowed to exist, even though it has outlived its purpose and value: the political class of parasites benefits immensely from the banking sector’s giant state-rigged skimming machine.

An automated banking utility has no need for parasitic bankers or politicos or indeed, a central bank. The only legitimate regulatory function of the state is to enforce transparency; beyond that, its actions are all subsidies of one sort or another of politically powerful constituencies at the expense of the real economy’s productive people, communities and enterprises.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/ge5lWNT5Grg/story01.htm Tyler Durden

JPM's Quiet Scramble To Refill Its Gold Vault

As we repoted consistently, at times on a daily basis, one of the more memorable stories of the summer of 2013, was the rampant and furious depletion of gold (both eligible and – mostly – registered) stored deep in the gold vault of JPMorgan located under 1 Chase Manhattan Plaza, since sold to a Chinese conglomerate (understandable considering China’s insatiable appetite for the yellow metal in physical, not paper form). This culminated with some truly impressive multi-way vault rearrangements in which the other 4 Comex members would provide gold to JPM on an almost daily basis (see here and here). But while Chinese demand may explain the outflow of physical, what is head-scratching is the just as furious scramble by JPM to obtain gold in the past few weeks.

As persistent trackers of the CME’s daily depository statistics update are well aware, over the past week, JPM has been accumulating an impressive amount of gold, and what is more curious, it has been precisely in increments of 64,300 ounces of eligible gold on a daily basis. Putting this scramble in context, two months ago JPM had only 181K ounces of eliglble gold. And yet, just today, the Comex announced that JPM’s eliglble vault gold rose by almost that amount, increasing by 125K to a reputable 1.2 million eligible ounces.

JPM’s total eligible holdings, and especially the recent surge, are shown below:

It bears pointing out that while eligible gold has been surging higher, JPM’s registered gold has once again contracted, and as of today, it closed at its lowest ever: just 87K ounces of gold!

So with gold plunging to multi-year lows, is JPM just taking advantage of the “blood on the streets” and becoming the helpful bidder of last (or first) resort and replenishing its record low depleted inventory by taking advantage of below production cost fire sales, or… is something else going on here?

Inquiring minds want to know.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/E1usp_6fW1U/story01.htm Tyler Durden

JPM’s Quiet Scramble To Refill Its Gold Vault

As we repoted consistently, at times on a daily basis, one of the more memorable stories of the summer of 2013, was the rampant and furious depletion of gold (both eligible and – mostly – registered) stored deep in the gold vault of JPMorgan located under 1 Chase Manhattan Plaza, since sold to a Chinese conglomerate (understandable considering China’s insatiable appetite for the yellow metal in physical, not paper form). This culminated with some truly impressive multi-way vault rearrangements in which the other 4 Comex members would provide gold to JPM on an almost daily basis (see here and here). But while Chinese demand may explain the outflow of physical, what is head-scratching is the just as furious scramble by JPM to obtain gold in the past few weeks.

As persistent trackers of the CME’s daily depository statistics update are well aware, over the past week, JPM has been accumulating an impressive amount of gold, and what is more curious, it has been precisely in increments of 64,300 ounces of eligible gold on a daily basis. Putting this scramble in context, two months ago JPM had only 181K ounces of eliglble gold. And yet, just today, the Comex announced that JPM’s eliglble vault gold rose by almost that amount, increasing by 125K to a reputable 1.2 million eligible ounces.

JPM’s total eligible holdings, and especially the recent surge, are shown below:

It bears pointing out that while eligible gold has been surging higher, JPM’s registered gold has once again contracted, and as of today, it closed at its lowest ever: just 87K ounces of gold!

So with gold plunging to multi-year lows, is JPM just taking advantage of the “blood on the streets” and becoming the helpful bidder of last (or first) resort and replenishing its record low depleted inventory by taking advantage of below production cost fire sales, or… is something else going on here?

Inquiring minds want to know.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/E1usp_6fW1U/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Fed’s Balance Sheet Rises To Record $4.01 Trillion

Dear Federal Reserve: happy 100th birthday! What better way to celebrate it than with a balance sheet that just crossed above $4 trillion, or $4.01 trillion to be precise, which represents 24% of the recently upward revised US GDP, for the first (but certainly not last) time in history. Fingers crossed that promptly after next year’s Untaper, the Fed can boast a $5 trillion balance sheet this time next year, and so on, and so forth.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/oF1vJJRZmWs/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Fed's Balance Sheet Rises To Record $4.01 Trillion

Dear Federal Reserve: happy 100th birthday! What better way to celebrate it than with a balance sheet that just crossed above $4 trillion, or $4.01 trillion to be precise, which represents 24% of the recently upward revised US GDP, for the first (but certainly not last) time in history. Fingers crossed that promptly after next year’s Untaper, the Fed can boast a $5 trillion balance sheet this time next year, and so on, and so forth.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/oF1vJJRZmWs/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Bonds & Bullion Battered As Russell Retraces Half FOMC Ramp

While stocks were the headline-makers yesterday, they mostly range-traded today taking a breather to think (even with a double-POMO) as the rest of the world's asset classes did their thing. The Dow closed at a new recxord highs but the Russell 2000, however, lost over half its gains from yesterday! Markets everywhere saw major moves… in no particular order, JPY carry trades disconnected from stocks (EURJPY fading) – until the last few minutes of failed ramp-levitation; 5Y Treasuries underperformed back to 3-month highs (up 11bps – the most in over 5 months) and the Treasury complex saw its biggest bear-flattening (5s30s) in over 2 years; WTI crude rose notably on the day , back above $99; and gold (and silver) was monkey-hammered to 40-month lows – with the biggest 2-day drop in 6 months. Following yesterday's smackdown, VIX initially followed through but as the day wore on, demand for protection grew and VIX closed higher… oh, and it's not all glee in stocks as internals today triggered another Hindenburg Omen.

 

Stocks were very mixed… (only the Dow green – new record high)

 

But for gold (and silver) – it was a very ugly day… (gold closed at its 'average' price of the last 7 years and lowest since July 2010)

 

Stocks got no support from JPY crosses once Europe closed…but were in great demand as algos tried to lift stocks to their highs into the close…

 

And the afternoon saw VIX decouple as protection was bid…

 

As it seems the high-beta honeys were not in vogue today as Russell 2000 gave back more than half yesterday's gains…

 

Treasuries were clubbed…

 

As the term structure flattened dramatically…

 

The 5th closing Hindenburg Omen in the last 2 weeks…

 

Charts: Bloomberg


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/E6byIROtNYo/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Bonds & Bullion Battered As Russell Retraces Half FOMC Ramp

While stocks were the headline-makers yesterday, they mostly range-traded today taking a breather to think (even with a double-POMO) as the rest of the world's asset classes did their thing. The Dow closed at a new recxord highs but the Russell 2000, however, lost over half its gains from yesterday! Markets everywhere saw major moves… in no particular order, JPY carry trades disconnected from stocks (EURJPY fading) – until the last few minutes of failed ramp-levitation; 5Y Treasuries underperformed back to 3-month highs (up 11bps – the most in over 5 months) and the Treasury complex saw its biggest bear-flattening (5s30s) in over 2 years; WTI crude rose notably on the day , back above $99; and gold (and silver) was monkey-hammered to 40-month lows – with the biggest 2-day drop in 6 months. Following yesterday's smackdown, VIX initially followed through but as the day wore on, demand for protection grew and VIX closed higher… oh, and it's not all glee in stocks as internals today triggered another Hindenburg Omen.

 

Stocks were very mixed… (only the Dow green – new record high)

 

But for gold (and silver) – it was a very ugly day… (gold closed at its 'average' price of the last 7 years and lowest since July 2010)

 

Stocks got no support from JPY crosses once Europe closed…but were in great demand as algos tried to lift stocks to their highs into the close…

 

And the afternoon saw VIX decouple as protection was bid…

 

As it seems the high-beta honeys were not in vogue today as Russell 2000 gave back more than half yesterday's gains…

 

Treasuries were clubbed…

 

As the term structure flattened dramatically…

 

The 5th closing Hindenburg Omen in the last 2 weeks…

 

Charts: Bloomberg


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/E6byIROtNYo/story01.htm Tyler Durden

"Housing Bubble 2.0" – Same As "Housing Bubble 1.0"; Just Different Actors

Submitted by Mark Hanson via MHanson.com,

In order to achieve the greatest risk/reward asymmetry from the 2014 single-family housing stimulus “hangover”, or “reset”, happening right now you must change the way you think about this asset class.  When doing so, clarity emerges (at least to me).

Things come into mind, such as;

When other asset classes go through periods of excessive price appreciation or returns, most reasonable people worry that a “consolidation” or “correction” could happen at any time.  In large part, this fear can keep an asset price higher for longer than anybody ever thought possible.  However, with respect to housing, when prices are moving higher, not a single soul will ever forecast a “consolidation” or “contraction”, rather periods of “less appreciation”.

Or, when ”greater fool” trades consisting of highly populated cohorts blow up there are serious consequences like we saw when housing crashed in 2008-09.  But, at least, because the demand base is so wide you have ‘some’ heads to hit the bid all the way down.  However, when greater fool trade cohorts are razor thin like in “Housing Bubble 2.0″ – local area private investors and a hand-full of giant PE firms – extreme volatility is almost certain.

In this short note, I outline where my research is going at the first of the year supporting ideas about why a “strong economy” is negative for this housing market;  houses are far “more expensive” today then from 2003-2007 (i.e., “affordability” much worse); and how everybody has been “fooled by stimulus” and unprecedented monetary policy, yet again.

This report — which I am in the process of turning into a ppt presentation — establishes what US housing has really become over the past 12-years and in my opinion makes it far easier to time its unprecedented volatility and forecast the outcomes that since 2002 have fooled most of the people most of the time.

 This housing market is “resetting” right now;  for the third time in six years. It might look and feel a little different, but as I detail in this note, it’s not really different this time around.

1)  Overview, Housing Bubble 1.0 vs. Bubble 2.0;  Same flicker, different actors

We can all agree that extraordinary monetary policy and excessive speculation can cause price distortions and potential bubbles in almost any asset class.  I think we can also agree that in 2006 housing was in a legitimate “bubble”.  I contend that this housing market is in a bubble, right here and now.

Most have completely forgotten — or are too young to remember — what the 2003 to 2007 housing and finance era was all about.  It’s so wild to me, for instance, when I constantly hear economists or the media rattle off “affordability” comparisons between then and now;  with such confidence that houses have not been as affordable as they are today in decades.  Of course, invariably, they assume everybody always used 30-year fixed rate loans when on the contrary, from 2003 to 2007, these were the “minority” of originations.  Not acknowledging, or normalizing “affordability” to account for this, radically changes everything.

At the superficial level, the misguided belief about today’s superior “affordability” makes sense because during Bubble 1.0 – when the economy and labor markets were doing great – ’rates were higher’ than today.  Hey, just look at a chart of Fannie Mae rates or 10-year UST, right?  Yes, they are right, technically; “rates were higher” then, than now.  And house prices went through the roof.  That’s the correlation everybody is sticking too…strong economy + higher rates = higher house prices.   But, this would be incorrect.

In reality, on Main Street – to tens of millions of homeowners – from 2003 to 07 mortgages were much cheaper on a monthly payment basis than ever before in history and ever have been since.  This statement is true, even when factoring in the much higher nominal house prices back then, and the recent Fed-induced sub-3.5% that lasted from 2011 through May 2013.  This was because the incremental – in fact, the “primary” in many regions around the nation — buyer, refinancer, and HELOC user used “other than” 30-year fixed rate money.

In contrast to the revisionist history being peddled today, the 2003-2007 era was all about introducing extreme leverage-in-finance — incrementally increasing each year — through exotic lending.  This made it so people could keep buying more expensive houses and refinancing at higher loan amounts on income that didn’t support it. 

The advent and increasingly exotic nature of mortgage loans from 2003 to 2007 enabled the greatest “greater fool” trade of all time.  Despite “rates being higher” from 2003 to 2007, everybody always earned the amount necessary to qualify for a loan;  it turned virtually every homeowner in America into a Real Estate speculator driving the market with reckless abandon.   Then, in 2008, when all the high-leverage loans went away at the same time, housing “reset” to what the fundamental, “organic” demand cohort could really “afford” using 30-year fixed rate, fully-amortizing financing and when made to prove their income and assets.

Today, those looking at 2006 house prices as a benchmark for where house prices are headed — or assuming house prices are ‘safe’ or not back in a ‘bubble’ because they haven’t regained those prices – are looking at the wrong thing.  That’s because house prices never can get back there unless employment surges and incomes rise double-digit percentage points with a respectable number in front.  Or, unless all the exotic, high-leverage, no documentation loans come back.

In other words, for house prices to get back where they once were, something has to be introduced that brings back the leverage-in-finance lost when exotic loans went away and everybody suddenly went from earning $20k a month to their real incomes when qualify for a mortgage loan.

Certainly, if we are staring a multi-year economic recovery in the face that brings higher rates, the accompanying job and income growth over the next several years won’t hold a candle to the historical “affordability” from 2003 to 2007 using a “Pay Option ARM” or “stated income” loan.

 

2)   2003-2007 vs 2011-2013…a stark
comparison 

There is little difference between between 2003 – 2007, when housing went through “Ma and Pa America speculation-fever” and 2011 – 2013, when private and institutional “investors” caught speculation-fever.  Of course, other than the actors being different;  the primary monetary policy recipient and speculator cohort changed from Ma and Pa shelter speculator to Dick & Son’s Property Flippers and Blackstone.

This is obvious through a dozen different datasets, and especially in the sales volume divergence between ”new” and “resale” houses.  Even ”resale” volume on an absolute basis highlights the lack of true “organic” demand when normalized for “distressed” and investors reselling flips and rentals, which can look like “organic” sales to most everybody when using surface level data.

 

The stimulus-induced housing market pumps and subsequent “reset” periods 2003-2013:

a)  Housing didn’t peak in 2006.  Rather, they peaked with respect to “affordability” in 2002.  That’s when the average house became “unaffordable” to the average household on a monthly payment basis using a 30-year fixed mortgage. To makes matters worse, rates surged in 2003

b)  Viola’!  Enter, high-leverage, exotic loans in 2003. Exotic loans removed the “fundamentals” and mortgage loan guidelines “governor” on house prices. 

c)  Using high-leverage, exotic loans from 2003-07 Ma and Pa America were able to circumvent the fundamental laws of supply, demand, and affordability and became speculators.  Suddenly, everybody in America got a substantial pay raise through the new found leverage-in-finance;  they earned enough money per month to buy whatever house they wanted using interest only, Pay Option ARMs, HELOC’s, or SISA’s and NINJA’s.

 Bottom Line on 2003 – 07:  ”Bubble 1.0″ – the 2003 to 2007 parabolic period – was mostly due to exotic loan leverage-in-finance (easy credit) being introduced, which — because house prices follow the most readily available mortgage financing terms and guidelines – drove the incremental and primary buyer / refinancer speculator demand cohort, Ma and PA America.  In fact, in 2005-06 in CA 70% of all loans were “other than” 30-year fixed rates loans.

d)  Then in 2008 the housing market “reset” — when all the exotic, high-leverage loans went away at the same time — to fundamentals (what somebody could buy or qualify for using a 30-year fixed rate mortgage and guidelines looking at real employment, income, assets, DTI, appraisal etc.)

e)  Viola’!  Enter, the 2009-10 “Homebuyer Tax-Credit, $8k nationally and $18k in CA.  In 38 states the credit could be monetized for the purposes of an FHA downpayment making it the first, best, and last chance hundreds of thousands of “first-time” buyers had to buy a house.  In fact, first-time buyer volume has never been as high since.  During the tax credit period there were ”lines of buyers around the corner”, “multiple-offers”, and the Case-Shiller index went “vertical”. Everybody was convinced housing was in a “durable” recovery with “escape velocity”.  Huge bets were made by well-known investors on ’this’ recovery.

f)  Then in 2010 the housing market “reset” — on the sunset of the Tax-Credit — to fundamentals (what somebody could buy or qualify for without the free downpayment, using a 30-year fixed rate mortgage and guidelines looking at real employment, income, assets, DTI, appraisal etc.).   Housing went into a technical “double-dip” in 2011.

g)  Viola’!  Enter, the summer of 2011 “Operation Twist” speculation that drove down mortgage rates and UST to historically low levels. Cheap cash starving for yield on the back of years of ZIRP and on QE was mobilized.  Just like Ma and Pa did in item b) and c) above, “all-cash” buyers, using flawed cap-rate models as a guide, removed the “fundamentals” and mortgage loan guidelines “governor” on house prices.

Bottom Line on 2011 – 13:  ”Bubble 2.0″ – the 2011 to May 2013 parabolic period – was mostly due to easy and cheap capital in search for yield turning private and institutional investors into the incremental buyer / speculator demand cohort.  Like Ma and Pa from 2003 to 2007 (items b) and c)) above, they have been able to circumvent the fundamental laws of supply, demand, and affordability but through “all-cash” using flawed cap-rate models as a guide.  The parallels are many.  For example, in Bubble 1.0 hot spots, over half of all mortgage loans were “exotic” in nature.  In Bubble 2.0 hot spots, over half of the buyers paid in cash.

 

 3)  Housing responds well to “stimulus”;  contracts when stimulus is removed.  The next “Reset”

The point of items a – g  above is clear;  housing responds well to “stimulus” and “resets” when the stimulus dries up.

From 2011-13 the “stimulus” was most utilized – not by end-users like from 2003 to 2007 and again from 2009-10 – but by ‘yield starved” investors.   Which is exactly the “catalyst” for the next “reset”.  That is, a move from “distressed”, which has ruled the market for years, back to an “organic”, or a “fundamental” based housing market  – as the private and institutional investors leave – in which people use mortgage loans to buy will once again be “governed” by 30-year fixed rate mortgages, fundamentals, guidelines looking at real employment, income, assets, DTI, appraisal etc.

And as in 2008, and again in 2010, when the “governor” is put back on, prices will ”reset”.   Right now, under house prices, there is an air-pocket equal to half the past 2 year gains.

 

4)  My Favorite Datasets…Bubble 2.0 in Pictures

These following data show how “cheap” houses really were from 2003 to 2007 (affordability high) relative to today, for those using a mortgage loan to buy relative to today.

 

a)  California Mega-Bubble 2.0

House prices are down 26% from peak 2006.   But it costs 12% MORE on a monthly payment basis to buy today’s house.   Say what!?!?

Or, put another way if house prices were the same as 2006 today, using today’s 4.625% 30 year fixed rate mortgage it would cost 34% more per month to buy;  one would have to earn 48% more to qualify.  Astounding!

That’s because back then the primary buyer/refinancer/price pusher used “other than” fixed rate loans.  In fact, in 2005 to 2007 over 60% of all mortgages were “other than” 30-year fixed-rate fully documented loans.

Masking the “unaffordability” of today’s housing market is “all-cash” buyers who are not “governed” by end-user fundamentals (what somebody could buy or qualify for using a 30-year fixed rate mortgage and guidelines looking at real employment, income, assets, DTI, appraisal etc.)

Bottom line:  as investors slow or shut down the buying and the market turns more “organic” — or normal — in nature, significant price pressure will present again.

CA REAL AFFORD 2003 -06 -13

b)  The Smoking Gun

 The red line in the chart represents the mortgage payment needed for the median priced CA house (black bar) from 2000 to 2013.  This chart assumes that from 2003 to 2007 the primary purchase/refi/price pusher cohort used the popular loan programs of the time, “other than” 30-year fixed-rate fully-documented loans.

Bottom line:  Houses first became “unaffordable” in 2002.  Then, exotic loans were introduced in 2003 allowing people to keep buying more house without income following suit.  When the exotic loans all went away at the same time in 2008 house prices “reset” to the real “affordability” using a 30-year fixed rate mortgages requiring proof of income and assets.  The market ticked higher slightly in 2010 on the Homebuyer Tax-Credit then “double-dipped” as the stimulus was removed.  Of course, the third major stimulus aimed at housing in the last 10 years came in Q4 2011, exactly when housing caught it’s most recent bid.  The past two-year move was so fast and large that the subsequent “reset” should be ‘another’ one for the record books.

CA Med Price and Payment using popular loan progs - Bar vs Lone chart

 

c)  The Smoking Gun 2

Like the chart above, this shows the typical monthly payment for the median CA house from 2001 to 2013.

Bottom line:  Houses have NEVER BEEN MORE EXPENSIVE” on a monthly payment basis than right now.

CA Mo Payment to buy median priced house 2000-13 - loan progs shown1


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/7Nk0hdFNd1c/story01.htm Tyler Durden

“Housing Bubble 2.0” – Same As “Housing Bubble 1.0”; Just Different Actors

Submitted by Mark Hanson via MHanson.com,

In order to achieve the greatest risk/reward asymmetry from the 2014 single-family housing stimulus “hangover”, or “reset”, happening right now you must change the way you think about this asset class.  When doing so, clarity emerges (at least to me).

Things come into mind, such as;

When other asset classes go through periods of excessive price appreciation or returns, most reasonable people worry that a “consolidation” or “correction” could happen at any time.  In large part, this fear can keep an asset price higher for longer than anybody ever thought possible.  However, with respect to housing, when prices are moving higher, not a single soul will ever forecast a “consolidation” or “contraction”, rather periods of “less appreciation”.

Or, when ”greater fool” trades consisting of highly populated cohorts blow up there are serious consequences like we saw when housing crashed in 2008-09.  But, at least, because the demand base is so wide you have ‘some’ heads to hit the bid all the way down.  However, when greater fool trade cohorts are razor thin like in “Housing Bubble 2.0″ – local area private investors and a hand-full of giant PE firms – extreme volatility is almost certain.

In this short note, I outline where my research is going at the first of the year supporting ideas about why a “strong economy” is negative for this housing market;  houses are far “more expensive” today then from 2003-2007 (i.e., “affordability” much worse); and how everybody has been “fooled by stimulus” and unprecedented monetary policy, yet again.

This report — which I am in the process of turning into a ppt presentation — establishes what US housing has really become over the past 12-years and in my opinion makes it far easier to time its unprecedented volatility and forecast the outcomes that since 2002 have fooled most of the people most of the time.

 This housing market is “resetting” right now;  for the third time in six years. It might look and feel a little different, but as I detail in this note, it’s not really different this time around.

1)  Overview, Housing Bubble 1.0 vs. Bubble 2.0;  Same flicker, different actors

We can all agree that extraordinary monetary policy and excessive speculation can cause price distortions and potential bubbles in almost any asset class.  I think we can also agree that in 2006 housing was in a legitimate “bubble”.  I contend that this housing market is in a bubble, right here and now.

Most have completely forgotten — or are too young to remember — what the 2003 to 2007 housing and finance era was all about.  It’s so wild to me, for instance, when I constantly hear economists or the media rattle off “affordability” comparisons between then and now;  with such confidence that houses have not been as affordable as they are today in decades.  Of course, invariably, they assume everybody always used 30-year fixed rate loans when on the contrary, from 2003 to 2007, these were the “minority” of originations.  Not acknowledging, or normalizing “affordability” to account for this, radically changes everything.

At the superficial level, the misguided belief about today’s superior “affordability” makes sense because during Bubble 1.0 – when the economy and labor markets were doing great – ’rates were higher’ than today.  Hey, just look at a chart of Fannie Mae rates or 10-year UST, right?  Yes, they are right, technically; “rates were higher” then, than now.  And house prices went through the roof.  That’s the correlation everybody is sticking too…strong economy + higher rates = higher house prices.   But, this would be incorrect.

In reality, on Main Street – to tens of millions of homeowners – from 2003 to 07 mortgages were much cheaper on a monthly payment basis than ever before in history and ever have been since.  This statement is true, even when factoring in the much higher nominal house prices back then, and the recent Fed-induced sub-3.5% that lasted from 2011 through May 2013.  This was because the incremental – in fact, the “primary” in many regions around the nation — buyer, refinancer, and HELOC user used “other than” 30-year fixed rate money.

In contrast to the revisionist history being peddled today, the 2003-2007 era was all about introducing extreme leverage-in-finance — incrementally increasing each year — through exotic lending.  This made it so people could keep buying more expensive houses and refinancing at higher loan amounts on income that didn’t support it. 

The advent and increasingly exotic nature of mortgage loans from 2003 to 2007 enabled the greatest “greater fool” trade of all time.  Despite “rates being higher” from 2003 to 2007, everybody always earned the amount necessary to qualify for a loan;  it turned virtually every homeowner in America into a Real Estate speculator driving the market with reckless abandon.   Then, in 2008, when all the high-leverage loans went away at the same time, housing “reset” to what the fundamental, “organic” demand cohort could really “afford” using 30-year fixed rate, fully-amortizing financing and when made to prove their income and assets.

Today, those looking at 2006 house prices as a benchmark for where house prices are headed — or assuming house prices are ‘safe’ or not back in a ‘bubble’ because they haven’t regained those prices – are looking at the wrong thing.  That’s because house prices never can get back there unless employment surges and incomes rise double-digit percentage points with a respectable number in front.  Or, unless all the exotic, high-leverage, no documentation loans come back.

In other words, for house prices to get back where they once were, something has to be introduced that brings back the leverage-in-finance lost when exotic loans went away and everybody suddenly went from earning $20k a month to their real incomes when qualify for a mortgage loan.

Certainly, if we are staring a multi-year economic recovery in the face that brings higher rates, the accompanying job and income growth over the next several years won’t hold a candle to the historical “affordability” from 2003 to 2007 using a “Pay Option ARM” or “stated income” loan.

 

2)   2003-2007 vs 2011-2013…a stark comparison 

There is little difference between between 2003 – 2007, when housing went through “Ma and Pa America speculation-fever” and 2011 – 2013, when private and institutional “investors” caught speculation-fever.  Of course, other than the actors being different;  the primary monetary policy recipient and speculator cohort changed from Ma and Pa shelter speculator to Dick & Son’s Property Flippers and Blackstone.

This is obvious through a dozen different datasets, and especially in the sales volume divergence between ”new” and “resale” houses.  Even ”resale” volume on an absolute basis highlights the lack of true “organic” demand when normalized for “distressed” and investors reselling flips and rentals, which can look like “organic” sales to most everybody when using surface level data.

 

The stimulus-induced housing market pumps and subsequent “reset” periods 2003-2013:

a)  Housing didn’t peak in 2006.  Rather, they peaked with respect to “affordability” in 2002.  That’s when the average house became “unaffordable” to the average household on a monthly payment basis using a 30-year fixed mortgage. To makes matters worse, rates surged in 2003

b)  Viola’!  Enter, high-leverage, exotic loans in 2003. Exotic loans removed the “fundamentals” and mortgage loan guidelines “governor” on house prices. 

c)  Using high-leverage, exotic loans from 2003-07 Ma and Pa America were able to circumvent the fundamental laws of supply, demand, and affordability and became speculators.  Suddenly, everybody in America got a substantial pay raise through the new found leverage-in-finance;  they earned enough money per month to buy whatever house they wanted using interest only, Pay Option ARMs, HELOC’s, or SISA’s and NINJA’s.

 Bottom Line on 2003 – 07:  ”Bubble 1.0″ – the 2003 to 2007 parabolic period – was mostly due to exotic loan leverage-in-finance (easy credit) being introduced, which — because house prices follow the most readily available mortgage financing terms and guidelines – drove the incremental and primary buyer / refinancer speculator demand cohort, Ma and PA America.  In fact, in 2005-06 in CA 70% of all loans were “other than” 30-year fixed rates loans.

d)  Then in 2008 the housing market “reset” — when all the exotic, high-leverage loans went away at the same time — to fundamentals (what somebody could buy or qualify for using a 30-year fixed rate mortgage and guidelines looking at real employment, income, assets, DTI, appraisal etc.)

e)  Viola’!  Enter, the 2009-10 “Homebuyer Tax-Credit, $8k nationally and $18k in CA.  In 38 states the credit could be monetized for the purposes of an FHA downpayment making it the first, best, and last chance hundreds of thousands of “first-time” buyers had to buy a house.  In fact, first-time buyer volume has never been as high since.  During the tax credit period there were ”lines of buyers around the corner”, “multiple-offers”, and the Case-Shiller index went “vertical”. Everybody was convinced housing was in a “durable” recovery with “escape velocity”.  Huge bets were made by well-known investors on ’this’ recovery.

f)  Then in 2010 the housing market “reset” — on the sunset of the Tax-Credit — to fundamentals (what somebody could buy or qualify for without the free downpayment, using a 30-year fixed rate mortgage and guidelines looking at real employment, income, assets, DTI, appraisal etc.).   Housing went into a technical “double-dip” in 2011.

g)  Viola’!  Enter, the summer of 2011 “Operation Twist” speculation that drove down mortgage rates and UST to historically low levels. Cheap cash starving for yield on the back of years of ZIRP and on QE was mobilized.  Just like Ma and Pa did in item b) and c) above, “all-cash” buyers, using flawed cap-rate models as a guide, removed the “fundamentals” and mortgage loan guidelines “governor” on house prices.

Bottom Line on 2011 – 13:  ”Bubble 2.0″ – the 2011 to May 2013 parabolic period – was mostly due to easy and cheap capital in search for yield turning private and institutional investors into the incremental buyer / speculator demand cohort.  Like Ma and Pa from 2003 to 2007 (items b) and c)) above, they have been able to circumvent the fundamental laws of supply, demand, and affordability but through “all-cash” using flawed cap-rate models as a guide.  The parallels are many.  For example, in Bubble 1.0 hot spots, over half of all mortgage loans were “exotic” in nature.  In Bubble 2.0 hot spots, over half of the buyers paid in cash.

 

 3)  Housing responds well to “stimulus”;  contracts when stimulus is removed.  The next “Reset”

The point of items a – g  above is clear;  housing responds well to “stimulus” and “resets” when the stimulus dries up.

From 2011-13 the “stimulus” was most utilized – not by end-users like from 2003 to 2007 and again from 2009-10 – but by ‘yield starved” investors.   Which is exactly the “catalyst” for the next “reset”.  That is, a move from “distressed”, which has ruled the market for years, back to an “organic”, or a “fundamental” based housing market  – as the private and institutional investors leave – in which people use mortgage loans to buy will once again be “governed” by 30-year fixed rate mortgages, fundamentals, guidelines looking at real employment, income, assets, DTI, appraisal etc.

And as in 2008, and again in 2010, when the “governor” is put back on, prices will ”reset”.   Right now, under house prices, there is an air-pocket equal to half the past 2 year gains.

 

4)  My Favorite Datasets…Bubble 2.0 in Pictures

These following data show how “cheap” houses really were from 2003 to 2007 (affordability high) relative to today, for those using a mortgage loan to buy relative to today.

 

a)  California Mega-Bubble 2.0

House prices are down 26% from peak 2006.   But it costs 12% MORE on a monthly payment basis to buy today’s house.   Say what!?!?

Or, put another way if house prices were the same as 2006 today, using today’s 4.625% 30 year fixed rate mortgage it would cost 34% more per month to buy;  one would have to earn 48% more to qualify.  Astounding!

That’s because back then the primary buyer/refinancer/price pusher used “other than” fixed rate loans.  In fact, in 2005 to 2007 over 60% of all mortgages were “other than” 30-year fixed-rate fully documented loans.

Masking the “unaffordability” of today’s housing market is “all-cash” buyers who are not “governed” by end-user fundamentals (what somebody could buy or qualify for using a 30-year fixed rate mortgage and guidelines looking at real employment, income, assets, DTI, appraisal etc.)

Bottom line:  as investors slow or shut down the buying and the market turns more “organic” — or normal — in nature, significant price pressure will present again.

CA REAL AFFORD 2003 -06 -13

b)  The Smoking Gun

 The red line in the chart represents the mortgage payment needed for the median priced CA house (black bar) from 2000 to 2013.  This chart assumes that from 2003 to 2007 the primary purchase/refi/price pusher cohort used the popular loan programs of the time, “other than” 30-year fixed-rate fully-documented loans.

Bottom line:  Houses first became “unaffordable” in 2002.  Then, exotic loans were introduced in 2003 allowing people to keep buying more house without income following suit.  When the exotic loans all went away at the same time in 2008 house prices “reset” to the real “affordability” using a 30-year fixed rate mortgages requiring proof of income and assets.  The market ticked higher slightly in 2010 on the Homebuyer Tax-Credit then “double-dipped” as the stimulus was removed.  Of course, the third major stimulus aimed at housing in the last 10 years came in Q4 2011, exactly when housing caught it’s most recent bid.  The past two-year move was so fast and large that the subsequent “reset” should be ‘another’ one for the record books.

CA Med Price and Payment using popular loan progs - Bar vs Lone chart

 

c)  The Smoking Gun 2

Like the chart above, this shows the typical monthly payment for the median CA house from 2001 to 2013.

Bottom line:  Houses have NEVER BEEN MORE EXPENSIVE” on a monthly payment basis than right now.

CA Mo Payment to buy median priced house 2000-13 - loan progs shown1


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/7Nk0hdFNd1c/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Are These The Top 12 Tech Products Of The Last 22 Years?

After 22 years of reviewing tech products for the Wall Street Journal, Walt Mossberg is leaving; but before he does, he unveils what he believes are the 12 products that were the most-influential during his tenure at the "paper" (remember that: paper?). Remember the Apple Newton? How about Netscape? Mossberg believes even if these products did not last until the present, they left their mark in the evolution of personal technology. Do readers agree or disagree? And if not, which product that did not make the list should be on it?

 

Via WSJ,

Some readers will complain that Apple is overrepresented. My answer: Apple introduced more influential, breakthrough products for average consumers than any other company over the years of this column.

1. Newton MessagePad (1993)

Newton MessagePad foreshadowed some of today's most cutting-edge technology.

This hand-held computer from Apple was a failure, even a joke, mainly because the company promised it could flawlessly recognize handwriting. It didn't. But it had one feature that foreshadowed some of today's most cutting-edge technology: an early form of artificial intelligence. You could scrawl "lunch with Linda Jones on Thursday" and it would create a calendar entry for the right time with the right person.

2. Netscape Navigator (1994)

The first successful consumer Web browser, it was later crushed by Microsoft's Internet Explorer. But it made the Web a reality for millions and its influence has been incalculable. Every time you go to a Web page, you are seeing the legacy of Netscape in action.

3. Windows 95 (1995)

Windows 95 made the mouse a mainstay for computer users.

This was the Microsoft operating system that cemented the graphical user interface and the mouse as the way to operate a computer. While Apple's Macintosh had been using the system for a decade and cruder versions of Windows had followed, Windows 95 was much more refined and spread to a vastly larger audience than the Mac did.

4. The Palm Pilot (1997)

The Palm Pilot led to one of the first smartphones, the Treo.

The first successful personal digital assistant, the Pilot was also the first hand-held computer to be widely adopted. It led to one of the first smartphones, the Treo, and attracted a library of third-party apps, foreshadowing today's giant app stores.

5. Google Search (1998)

From the start, Google was faster than its predecessors.

The minute I used Google, it was obvious it was much faster and more accurate than previous search engines. It's impossible to overstate its importance, even today. In many ways, Google search propelled the entire Web.

6. The iPod (2001)

Apple's iPod was the first mainstream digital media player.

Apple's iPod was the first mainstream digital media player, able to hold 1,000 songs in a device the size of a deck of playing cards. It lifted the struggling computer maker to a new level and led to the wildly successful iTunes store and a line of popular mobile devices. (Apple Brings Design Flair To Its Digital Music Player 11/1/2001)

7. Facebook (2004)

Just as Netscape opened the Web, Facebook made the Internet into a social medium. There were some earlier social networks. But Facebook became the social network of choice, a place where you could share everything from a photo of a sunset to the news of a birth or death with a few friends, or with hundreds of thousands. Today, over a billion people use it and it has changed the entire concept of the Internet.

8. Twitter (2006)

Like Facebook, Twitter changed the way people live digitally.

Often seen as Facebook's chief competitor, Twitter is really something different—a sort of global instant-messaging system. It is used every second to alert huge audiences to everything from revolutions to interesting Web posts, or just to offer opinions on almost anything—as long as they fit in 140 characters. Like Facebook, it has changed the way people live digitally.

9. The iPhone (2007)

The iPhone was the first truly smart smartphone.

Apple electrified the tech world with this device—the first truly smart smartphone. It is an iPod, an Internet device and a phone combined in one small gadget. Its revolutionary multi-touch user interface is gradually replacing the PC's graphical user interface on many devices.

A year after it was introduced, it was joined by the App Store, which allowed third-party developers to sell programs, or apps, for the phone. They now number about a million. It has spawned many competitors that have collectively moved the Internet from a PC-centric system to a mobile-centric one.

10. Android (2008)

Google quickly jumped into the mobile world the iPhone created with this operating system that has spread to hundreds of devices using the same type of multi-touch interface. Android is now the dominant smartphone platform, with its own huge selection of apps.

While iPhones have remained relatively pricey, Android is powering much less costly phones.

11. The MacBook Air (2008)

The late Apple co-founder Steve Jobs introduced this iconic slim, light laptop by pulling it out of a standard manila envelope. It was one of the first computers to ditch the hard disk for solid-state storage and now can be seen all over—on office desks, on campuses and at coffee shops. It spa
wned a raft of Windows-based light laptops called Ultrabooks. I consider it the best laptop ever made.

12. The iPad (2010)

With this 10-inch tablet, Apple finally cracked the code on the long-languishing tablet category. Along with other tablets, it is gradually replacing the laptop for many uses and is popular with everyone from kids to CEOs. Developers have created nearly 500,000 apps for the iPad, far more than for any other tablet.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/jYmS1NvSB_0/story01.htm Tyler Durden